So beautiful! My heart aches a little watching, I had the best garden I’ve ever had until a week ago. I live on the western side of Kansas and we had a terrible hail. 80 MPH winds and four inches of rain in less than 20 minutes. My garden was obliterated. Flowers, cutting garden, raised beds. Gone. My pumpkin patch looked like it was mowed. But as bad as I feel for my garden, there are acres and acres of fall crops in my area destroyed, field sprinklers turned over, houses with windows smashed. So I will enjoy your garden and the gardens of others and hope my fall crops I planted after the hail will thrive!
That's heart breaking! This is my first year seriously gardening, and I didn't expect how emotional it would be! I had 2 good wind storms break my tomato plants, and a deer came through and cropped one of my pepper plants. Each incident threw me off for days!
Thanks for understanding! It feels selfish to be so sad, but I wasn’t ready to say goodbye yet! I’ve planned some changes for next year to better protect things. Gardening is all about learning every year for sure!
I can't imagine the work that goes into this. My mom and my dad used to do something similar many years ago (he would grow veggies/fruits and she would grow flowers/plants/trees).
Blight can last in the soil for years some people put 3 yrs in between planting tomatoes peppers and potatoes in the same space I guess it's called crop rotation but you can use natural sprays to help kill the spores.
Thanks for showing using a butane torch for squash bug eggs. I also have used it to kill the squash bugs themselves. I may have burnt my finger sand started a small fire in my garden killing some yesterday, but it's totally worth it! Surprisingly most of my squash bugs have been on my cucumbers and not my squash.
A Really beautiful garden, but it must be a lot of work and strength to maintain it, harvest it and walk around. hats off to 👍 enough inspiration for me for 2024 I hope to create something in the garden 🇨🇿🇨🇿🇨🇿🇨🇿 greetings from the Czech Republic I'm sorry for the mistakes I wrote, I'm not very good at English
You look like a Beautiful Angel in that dress😍. Great video , Bre The Plant Surgeon. You have alot of plants, more than i can take care of. Good for you that you can take care of all of them.
I'm not sure when you planted out your potatoes but it might be worth starting them a bit earlier since your summer is so hot. Potatoes are temptature sensitive with most active root development is at soil temperatures of between 59 and 68˚F. You might also choose a slightly quicker maturity potato to see if it will size up before the heat. Yukon Gem is slightly quicker to mature and has resistance to late blight.
You have beautiful gardens! You may need to fertilize your strawberries and asparagus and tomatoes just as they start to put on flowers. Trifecta or any 20/20/20 fertilizer will help all fruits get bigger faster. It seems to me that tomatoes , being a Warm weather crop would love hot weather. Food for thought. I move my crops every year...rotation. With 8 separate gardens, it takes some thought. Your gardens look beautiful and you may try to rotate. It limits the pests. They have trouble finding their favourites.
Your garden is spectacular! Great job! I have a couple of recommendations for you: (1) Zucchini Striato d'Italia appears to be vine borer-resistant. For each of the 3 years prior to planting this variety, the borer attacked my zucchini. For the last 3 years, planting only Striato d'Italia, I've had no vine borer incidents. I can't attribute this good fortune to any other reason but the change in variety. (2) For early-developing sweet bell peppers, try Mountaineer, which was developed to grow in Zone 5. I'm in 6b in NJ and this pepper always ripens before any other bell pepper, which seems to be more important than ever to have a decent harvest. Thanks for sharing and I wish you continued success! G.
I love your videos! They’re so helpful as I learn more and more about gardening. It also helps that our backyards are identical in shape and size (right down to the shed placement)! Question: what brand is your retractable hose reel? That would come in handy. 😊
I plant my tomatoes in the sunniest spot of the garden and move the gardens around every year so nothing grows in the same bed two years in a row ,you have plenty of beds to do that might help with the blight also,hope you dug down deep enough when you harvested your potatoes, you will find out if you get volunteers in that patch, also keep heaping them up and add some animal manure we ended up with enormous handspan size potatoes when we did that, have been binge watching your videos and just starting ours now ,we are getting late frosts though which is not helpful thanks for taking the time to share your garden.
Thoughts about the tomatoes, perhaps the sun on the other side of the garden kept the leaves drier so the plants could deal better with the humidity. Also, do you have a pollinator plant for your elderberries? Have you gotten berries yet?
I’ve done Amish paste one time, almost every single one cracked. I had a terrible experience with growing them but I’ve been saying maybe I need tog I’ve then one more chance!
🙋♀️ Question! Why did you put your zucchini in a cage? Is it to keep them small for cooking? This has been my first year growing them. I planted 2 bush type with no cage and they got enormous and have been putting out a scary amount of giant zucchini. Like tomatoes, they kept putting out more roots along the stem as they took over their garden space and touched ground. I just harvested my biggest yesterday (6lbs 12oz 16"x5.5"). I know they're not supported to be allowed to get that big, but they haven't been watery or seedy, and I mostly use them for zucchini breads. Is it ok for the plants to grow that way, or does the cage do something for them?
@@itsbreellis i’m trying so hard to have a little small garden in our garden tent, but unfortunately they ripped my tent and they got in. It’s just so hard to keep them away.
I love seeing your videos pop up! I'm a bit confused about my first frost date. One place says Oct 5th and another says the 15th. I guess I'll just have to err on the side of caution and plan on the 5th. Do you think if I cover my brassicas with hoops and plastic they will still be ok if we do get a frost before they're done? I know they wouldn't be able to handle a freeze but maybe a frost. This is my first year doing a good size garden and growing brassicas.
Brassicas do well with frost. I've had them thrive in the low 20s. Actually I kept kale alive through an entire Winter getting below -30 with a row cover.
@@kdonor Is it too late to start from seed or would it be safer to buy starts? Obviously it's cheaper to start from seed but not sure if I have time before first frost date. Also, was your row cover pretty air tight?
I put bricks down to keep my row cover down but it wasn't necessarily air tight. I mostly did it to keep cabbage moths off my brassicas. I'd love to make a hoop structure in the next year or two. I think it's late to start from seed cabbages and such. It's to me a hard season /hard to pull off fall crops because it's over 100 here most of the week so way too hot for cool crops yet the days are shortening and that will make things take longer. If you could find plants of your Brassicas that might work out just fine. Around here I don't think any hardware stores etc sell fall plants. And though I start all my seeds indoors in the late winter /early spring, I can't in the summer because I'm keeping our curtains over windows to keep the heat out. I hope that was helpful. I did plant more summer squash a few weeks ago and maybe next year I'll sow fall snow peas or something but depending on your climate, it's not easy. (,I'm in Nebraska if that helps)
@@kdonor Thankfully, there's a greenhouse near me that sells brassicas for fall. I called and they have everything I want. The only reason I'd want to start from seed is to save on pricing but I figured it was too late. I already have hoops made with PVC that I covered my stuff to keep moths away. I'll get greenhouse plastic to use for the cold weather. Thanks for replying!!
@@itsbreellis I planted about double that but had very limited sun to some spaces. They have been trickling in. We eat a lot fresh and I freeze what I am able to can when it gets cooler. I’m 6b too but CT. I’ve been following along and it’s fun but your garden is much more prolific than mine. I followed your luffa tunnel and mommy vibes are beautiful but no flowers. Maybe next year I have to start earlier.
Sorry don't spray with washing up stuff for blight...I just watched other utube channels U need to cut off leaves and the need air around your plants a lady put copper spray on them... Also U can't drop the leaves that have blight put in garbage bag and get rid of it in your normal garbage bin... Other wise your soil will be infested by the blight...can't ground stuff for years so look into it...by utube channels...good luck...
Imagine ten million food gardens like yours across the USA....now that would be a revolutionary act
Well with the population being 330 million I don’t see that being to hard to imagine. Not everyone is on the internet to share their garden.
So beautiful! My heart aches a little watching, I had the best garden I’ve ever had until a week ago. I live on the western side of Kansas and we had a terrible hail. 80 MPH winds and four inches of rain in less than 20 minutes. My garden was obliterated. Flowers, cutting garden, raised beds. Gone. My pumpkin patch looked like it was mowed. But as bad as I feel for my garden, there are acres and acres of fall crops in my area destroyed, field sprinklers turned over, houses with windows smashed. So I will enjoy your garden and the gardens of others and hope my fall crops I planted after the hail will thrive!
That's heart breaking! This is my first year seriously gardening, and I didn't expect how emotional it would be! I had 2 good wind storms break my tomato plants, and a deer came through and cropped one of my pepper plants. Each incident threw me off for days!
Thanks for understanding! It feels selfish to be so sad, but I wasn’t ready to say goodbye yet! I’ve planned some changes for next year to better protect things. Gardening is all about learning every year for sure!
So sorry for your garden very very hard to cope when that happens hope your fall garden goes well
I can't imagine the work that goes into this. My mom and my dad used to do something similar many years ago (he would grow veggies/fruits and she would grow flowers/plants/trees).
Blight can last in the soil for years some people put 3 yrs in between planting tomatoes peppers and potatoes in the same space I guess it's called crop rotation but you can use natural sprays to help kill the spores.
Thanks for showing using a butane torch for squash bug eggs. I also have used it to kill the squash bugs themselves. I may have burnt my finger sand started a small fire in my garden killing some yesterday, but it's totally worth it! Surprisingly most of my squash bugs have been on my cucumbers and not my squash.
I just found some on my cucumbers the other day. Last year they liked to hang around my cantaloupe as well!
Ellis..you are such a good role model for young girls.shamim✅🕊🦅🤝
A Really beautiful garden, but it must be a lot of work and strength to maintain it, harvest it and walk around. hats off to 👍 enough inspiration for me for 2024 I hope to create something in the garden
🇨🇿🇨🇿🇨🇿🇨🇿
greetings from the Czech Republic
I'm sorry for the mistakes I wrote, I'm not very good at English
That was me who left the squash bug watering tip…I’m so glad you tried it and were able to kill more of those little buggers!!! Haha!
Thank you so much for leaving that comment!! It’s helped so much this week! Appreciate it!
Yup yup, great videos.
You seem very skilled and passionate, keep the videos coming
You look like a Beautiful Angel in that dress😍. Great video , Bre The Plant Surgeon. You have alot of plants, more than i can take care of. Good for you that you can take care of all of them.
I'm not sure when you planted out your potatoes but it might be worth starting them a bit earlier since your summer is so hot. Potatoes are temptature sensitive with most active root development is at soil temperatures of between 59 and 68˚F. You might also choose a slightly quicker maturity potato to see if it will size up before the heat. Yukon Gem is slightly quicker to mature and has resistance to late blight.
You have beautiful gardens! You may need to fertilize your strawberries and asparagus and tomatoes just as they start to put on flowers. Trifecta or any 20/20/20 fertilizer will help all fruits get bigger faster.
It seems to me that tomatoes , being a Warm weather crop would love hot weather. Food for thought. I move my crops every year...rotation. With 8 separate gardens, it takes some thought. Your gardens look beautiful and you may try to rotate. It limits the pests. They have trouble finding their favourites.
Your garden is spectacular! Great job! I have a couple of recommendations for you: (1) Zucchini Striato d'Italia appears to be vine borer-resistant. For each of the 3 years prior to planting this variety, the borer attacked my zucchini. For the last 3 years, planting only Striato d'Italia, I've had no vine borer incidents. I can't attribute this good fortune to any other reason but the change in variety. (2) For early-developing sweet bell peppers, try Mountaineer, which was developed to grow in Zone 5. I'm in 6b in NJ and this pepper always ripens before any other bell pepper, which seems to be more important than ever to have a decent harvest. Thanks for sharing and I wish you continued success! G.
The squash bug terminator strikes again!😊 love your videos Bre, thank you
Beautiful garden! Lots of hard work for sure🌻💕
Your videos are not only beautiful in terms of content but also in how you edit them ! keep sharing the awesome videos."🌹🌹🌹🏵🥀🌺🌻💐
Tomatoes Love the sun, the best place is full sun if available.
I love your videos! They’re so helpful as I learn more and more about gardening. It also helps that our backyards are identical in shape and size (right down to the shed placement)! Question: what brand is your retractable hose reel? That would come in handy. 😊
Thank you! its a hoselink!
@@itsbreellis Thanks so much! ❤️
I enjoyed watching the garden 🏡 and Tour Bree You are Doing such an AN a Job
Try wrapping your squash stems with tin foil and duck tape inside out / sticky side out. Good luck 👍
The blight is in the soil in the shady spot. May be try heavy mulching in that area next year.
So inspirational! I dont have a truck either and really want to add cattle panels next year. How did you get them home????
I'm definitely working on mine!
Beautiful
Ba ba ba beautiful 😍 🤩!
🥰😍
Tulle or a pillowcase will help keep the squirrels off of those sunflower seeds!
Good morning 🌄🌞☕💬🫠🆒👋🏾🌹🔜🆗👉🏾💪🏾🫴🏾👍🏾🫵🏾🤲🏾🙏🏾🙌🏾😁
I plant my tomatoes in the sunniest spot of the garden and move the gardens around every year so nothing grows in the same bed two years in a row ,you have plenty of beds to do that might help with the blight also,hope you dug down deep enough when you harvested your potatoes, you will find out if you get volunteers in that patch, also keep heaping them up and add some animal manure we ended up with enormous handspan size potatoes when we did that, have been binge watching your videos and just starting ours now ,we are getting late frosts though which is not helpful thanks for taking the time to share your garden.
I’ve always found that tomatoes like sunny spots
Wonderful vegetables garden!subscribed!
For potatoes have you thought of doing bags instead and mounding UP?
Loving your garden girl! So good! 💕✨
Love all that you share! What placement do you use for your trellis-do they run East to West or north to south? Would you say it matters?
Love it ❤❤❤❤❤
I loved growing luffa but the seeds that were given to me were no good. So, maybe next year. They actually take the longest to grow and dry out.
So Beautiful and Inspiring💗
Beautiful garden!
Thoughts about the tomatoes, perhaps the sun on the other side of the garden kept the leaves drier so the plants could deal better with the humidity.
Also, do you have a pollinator plant for your elderberries? Have you gotten berries yet?
Love your garden. I haven’t been in my garden because of the spotted lantern flies. Those things freak me out!
I think I want to try Amish Paste next for a paste tomatoe. We have done La Rome 2 and there mid sized and i want bigger.
I’ve done Amish paste one time, almost every single one cracked. I had a terrible experience with growing them but I’ve been saying maybe I need tog I’ve then one more chance!
Amazing ❤
Have you tried Amish Paste instead of San Marzanos?
🙋♀️ Question! Why did you put your zucchini in a cage? Is it to keep them small for cooking? This has been my first year growing them.
I planted 2 bush type with no cage and they got enormous and have been putting out a scary amount of giant zucchini. Like tomatoes, they kept putting out more roots along the stem as they took over their garden space and touched ground. I just harvested my biggest yesterday (6lbs 12oz 16"x5.5"). I know they're not supported to be allowed to get that big, but they haven't been watery or seedy, and I mostly use them for zucchini breads. Is it ok for the plants to grow that way, or does the cage do something for them?
Love your channel!
Thank you so much!
Hi Bre🥰
Your garden is so beautiful
How do you keep the animals away from your garden?
Chickens have a fence and they do fine in there. As far as birds and squirrels go I do what I can lol
@@itsbreellis i’m trying so hard to have a little small garden in our garden tent, but unfortunately they ripped my tent and they got in. It’s just so hard to keep them away.
especially squirrels
@@D.Mark1 i agree
What do you do with the sunflower head? ❤
I save the seeds to replant/give to my chickens
@@itsbreellis Thanks 🙏 😘
I love seeing your videos pop up! I'm a bit confused about my first frost date. One place says Oct 5th and another says the 15th. I guess I'll just have to err on the side of caution and plan on the 5th. Do you think if I cover my brassicas with hoops and plastic they will still be ok if we do get a frost before they're done? I know they wouldn't be able to handle a freeze but maybe a frost. This is my first year doing a good size garden and growing brassicas.
Brassicas do well with frost. I've had them thrive in the low 20s. Actually I kept kale alive through an entire Winter getting below -30 with a row cover.
@@kdonor Thanks!
@@kdonor Is it too late to start from seed or would it be safer to buy starts? Obviously it's cheaper to start from seed but not sure if I have time before first frost date. Also, was your row cover pretty air tight?
I put bricks down to keep my row cover down but it wasn't necessarily air tight. I mostly did it to keep cabbage moths off my brassicas. I'd love to make a hoop structure in the next year or two.
I think it's late to start from seed cabbages and such. It's to me a hard season /hard to pull off fall crops because it's over 100 here most of the week so way too hot for cool crops yet the days are shortening and that will make things take longer. If you could find plants of your Brassicas that might work out just fine. Around here I don't think any hardware stores etc sell fall plants. And though I start all my seeds indoors in the late winter /early spring, I can't in the summer because I'm keeping our curtains over windows to keep the heat out. I hope that was helpful. I did plant more summer squash a few weeks ago and maybe next year I'll sow fall snow peas or something but depending on your climate, it's not easy. (,I'm in Nebraska if that helps)
@@kdonor Thankfully, there's a greenhouse near me that sells brassicas for fall. I called and they have everything I want. The only reason I'd want to start from seed is to save on pricing but I figured it was too late. I already have hoops made with PVC that I covered my stuff to keep moths away. I'll get greenhouse plastic to use for the cold weather. Thanks for replying!!
wow ...... Very nice ..... very lovely girl
How many tomato plants did you end up planting and how much have you harvested ?
I planted 40 plants. I havnt kept track of how many pounds. Something I should get better about but with how much comes in that can be tedious lol
@@itsbreellis I planted about double that but had very limited sun to some spaces. They have been trickling in. We eat a lot fresh and I freeze what I am able to can when it gets cooler. I’m 6b too but CT. I’ve been following along and it’s fun but your garden is much more prolific than mine. I followed your luffa tunnel and mommy vibes are beautiful but no flowers. Maybe next year I have to start earlier.
Perhaps your tomatoes need more fertilizer and the soil on the other side is better.
The sound on your videos is always good...but I never see a mic on you! 🤣🤣 How?! lol
Thank you! I typically hid it under clothing lol
@itsbreellis My husband is in video production, and I say well done! 😁
@@itsbreellis wow I never would have known!
Too bad about the squirrels. I've been enjoying goldfinches coming to eat the seeds in the sunflowers. Maybe my dogs keep the squirrels away.
Sorry don't spray with washing up stuff for blight...I just watched other utube channels U need to cut off leaves and the need air around your plants a lady put copper spray on them...
Also U can't drop the leaves that have blight put in garbage bag and get rid of it in your normal garbage bin...
Other wise your soil will be infested by the blight...can't ground stuff for years so look into it...by utube channels...good luck...
Υπότιτλους στα Ελληνικά🙏
❤🥵🥵🥵❤